Kentucky Writers Hall of Fame

Rebecca Caudill is the Hall of Fame's first children's author. She was born in 1899 in Harlan County, the daughter of two teachers, and she became one herself. She did not publish her first book until she was 44 years old. But from then until her death in 1985, she wrote 21 more books. Many of them focused on pioneer life in Appalachia. In 1949, her middle-grade book, Tree of Freedom, was a Newberry Honor Book; 15 years later, her picture book, A Pocketful of Cricket was a Caldecott Honor Book. She spent much of her adult life in Illinois, where they now give an annual Award in her name for the most popular middle-grad book, as voted on by the kids. She once said: "The first essential in any book is that it have something significant to say. A good book sticks to your ribs."

Thomas D. Clark was born in Mississippi in 1903. After working on farms, boats and sawmills in his teen years, he decided to get educated -- and he didn't stop until he had earned his doctorate in history at Duke University. Then he moved to the University of Kentucky, and for the next seven decades, he taught, researched, archived, collaborated and wrote. His first book was published in 1933; his last in 2002. Most were about his beloved adopted state, including A History of Kentucky and Kentucky, Land of Contrast. He helped found the University Press of Kentucky, the Kentucky History Center and the Lexington History Museum before his death in 2005, at the age of 101.

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"Pills, Petticoats & Plows" excerpt (read by Dr. James Klotter)

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"History of Kentucky 1937" excerpt (read by Dr. James Klotter)

Janice Holt Giles was born in 1905 in Arkansas, and was -- like Rebecca Caudill -- the daughter of two teachers. In her mid-30s, she moved to Frankfort, Kentucky, for a job, and soon after, to Louisville. Then, in 1949, at the age of 44, she published her first piece of fiction, entitled The Enduring Hills. That same year, she moved with her husband to his family's land in Adair County, near the Kentucky/Tennessee border. And over the next quarter-century, she wrote or co-wrote 24 books, including The Kentuckians (1953), Hannah Fowler (1956), and The Believers (1957) -- all focused on 19th century life in Kentucky. She died in Adair County in 1986.

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"The Believers" excerpt (read by Katerina Stoykova-Klemer)

James Baker Hall was born in Lexington in 1935. He attended Henry Clay High School, where he lettered in four sports, worked on his car, and, according to his wife, showed no attraction to literature. He then attended the University of Kentucky, eventually finding his way to the English Department. After graduating, he attended Stanford University on the prestigious Wallace Stegner Fellowship in Creative Writing. When he was 26, he published his first novel, Yates Paul, His Grand Flights, His Tootings, and continued to write and publish short fiction in The Saturday Evening Post, Kenyon, many other periodicals. His writing life co-existed always with his interest in photography. He was a serious photographer, and wrote about photography for Aperture and Esquire magazines. He returned to UK in 1973, where he directed the creative writing program for more than 30 years. During this time, in addition to mentoring hundreds of young writers, he produced another novel, a novel-in-verse, and six volumes of poetry. He served as Kentucky’s Poet Laureate from 2001 to 2003. He died in 2009. For the last thirty years of his life, he lived on a farm on the Harrison-Scott County line with his wife, Mary Ann Taylor-Hall, who's here with many family members tonight.

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"Sitting Between Two Mirrors" (read by Sarah Wylie VanMeter)

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"That First Kite" excerpt (read by Sarah Wylie VanMeter)

Etheridge Knight is one of the enduring voices of the Black Arts Movement, the poetic complement to the Black Power Movement of the 1960s. He was born in Mississippi in 1931, and at about age 8, moved with his family to Paducah, where he lived most of the rest of his childhood. He dropped out of school at 16, joined the army, and fought in Korea, where he was wounded and became addicted to drugs. To support his habit, he stole money from a convenience store, and spent nearly all of the 1960s in prison. His first book, Poems from Prison, was published while he was still an inmate, and it speaks to the tragedy of incarcerated black men. After his release from prison, he continued to write. He earned Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award nominations for his 1973 volume of mostly love poems, Belly Song and Other Poems. He served as writer in residence at the University of Pittsburgh and at the University of Hartford. He received honors from the Guggenheim Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts. It wasn't until age 58 that he earned his bachelor's degree; a year later, in 1991, he died of lung cancer.

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"Belly Song" (read by the author)

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"Idea of Ancestry" (read by the author)

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"Feeling F***ed Up" (read by Jude McPherson)

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"For Malcolm, A Year After" (read by Jude McPherson)

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"As You Leave Me" (read by Jude McPherson)

Thomas Merton is the only Hall of Fame member who is not native to the United States. He was born in France in 1915. By his 17th birthday, had suffered the loss of both of his parents. He moved permanently to the U.S. a couple of years later, attended Columbia University, had a spiritual crisis, converted to Catholicism and in 1941, at age 26, entered the Abbey of Our Lady of Gethsemani in Kentucky and became a Trappist monk. In 1948, while at Gethsemani, he published The Seven Storey Mountain, a memoir of his early life and conversion. It became a best-seller. He went on to become arguably the most important Catholic writer of the 20th century, transitioning from a fundamentalist Catholic and ascetic uninterested in the material world to an anti-war activist and champion of inter-religious dialogue. In 1968, he traveled to Thailand for a conference and was electrocuted by a faulty wire in his hotel. He died, in fact, on the 27th anniversary of his entrance into Gethsemani. His papers now reside at Bellarmine University in Louisville.

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"Journals" excerpt (read by Eric Reece)

Jesse Stuart was a writer of tremendous quality and also one of the most prolific writers in the history of Kentucky. He published 2,000 poems, 460 short stories and more than 60 books. Born in Greenup County in 1906, he was the son of tenant farmers. He went to Tennessee for college, but returned afterward to his Kentucky home, where he taught school and eventually became superintendent of schools. All the while, he wrote. His best known works include his poetry book, Man with a Bull-Tongue Plow, published in 1934. He also wrote the novels Trees of Heaven and Taps for Private Tussie, which sold a million copies during WW II. His autobiographical account of life as a rural educator was considered a classic in education circles: The Thread that Runs So True. Before his death in 1984, he created a Foundation that still operates and bears his name.

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"Beyond Dark Hills" excerpt (read by Georgia Green Stamper)

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"Sonnet #1 from Man With a Bull-Tongue Plow" (read by Georgia Green Stamper)